French Liberty. British Slavery, James Gillray's
1792 caricature poking fun at the French Revolution, anticipates the modern
comic strip in having both separate panels and characters speaking via speech
balloons. English: French Liberty. British Slavery. Js. Gy. desn. et fect. pro
bono publico. SUMMARY: A design in two compartments. On the left is a lean and
ragged sansculotte, seated on a stool before an open hearth ravenously eating
raw onions, while he warms his bare toes at the fire. He is rejoicing. On the
right is an immensely fat Englishman dining well, who is complaining about
taxation and starvation. MEDIUM: 1 print : etching, color. CREATED/PUBLISHED:
London : Pubd. by H. Humphrey, December 21st 1792. Source Library of
Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, LC-USZC4-6088. Creative Commons
Licence

Name: Detective Comics, No. 27 Value: $1,380,000.
Batman made his debut in the 27th issue of this monthly series. The comic book
sold for 10 cents when it hit the market in 1939. Seventy years later, the comic
fetches $1.38 million.

Name: Action Comics, No. 1 Value: $1,500,000. This
American comic book series - which first introduced Superman to the world - made
its debut in April 1938. “Action Comics #1 is the Holy Grail of comic books,”
Stephen Fishler, a leading expert on collectible comics and founder of
ComicConnect.com, told YourNabe.com. “Before Action Comics #1, there was no such
thing as a superhero or a man who could fly. Comics weren't even that popular.
It’s the single most important event in comic book history.”

X-Men2099

Comic Books

Collecting comic books has become quite a pastime since the
first comic books were issued. In 2010 Action Comics No1, which introduced
Superman to the world, sold for $1,500.00. A Detective Comics No. 27, which had
originally been sold for 10cents in 1939, realized $1.38 million dollars. This
was the debut of Batman’s comic issue.

They may be great adventures to inspire little boys and girls to
fly, but the artwork and rarity of originals, and the competition between avid
collectors, may turn what was a pleasant childhood idle hour into the deposit
for the young man’s or lady’s first home.

Comics began appearing in newspapers around the
1890s. Printing presses, invented in the
15th century allowed people to begin pamphleteering caricatures or events in
satirical form earlier then this, and others state examples such as sequential
depictions on Trajan’s Column (13AD) are really the first examples of comics.
Trajan’s Column is a Roman triumphal column in Rome which commemorates Roman
emperor Trajan's victory in the Dacian Wars by depicting the battles or ‘epic
wars’. It has been much copied since.

Although the word ‘comic’ stems from the Greek kōmikos
"of or pertaining to comedy" kōmos "revel, komos", via the Latin
cōmicus, the term has been extended to include those that address more
serious subjects and have heroes as main characters. It also describes a medium
where pictures predominates over words. In 1845 the satirical drawings that
appeared in magazines and newspapers were named ‘cartoons’, which may have
stemmed from Punch magazines (first issued in 1841) naming their drawings of
humorous depictions of current events ‘cartoons’ to lampoon the Parliament of
the day, who were themselves organising an exhibition of cartoons, or
preparatory drawings, at the time.

Those shown here, the Flash Gordon No 1 from September
1966, and the X-Men2099 signed first edition are from a big boy’s collection.
The Flash Gordon one, kept in a sealed plastic bag, is the first drawn by
Alfonso "Al" Williamson (March 21, 1931 – June 12, 2010) an American cartoonist,
comic book artist and illustrator specializing in adventure, Western and
science-fiction/ fantasy. He gained recognition for continuing Alex Raymond's
(1909-1956), the original illustrator of Flash Gordon comics, with his own work
on the Flash Gordon comic-book series. First published January 7, 1934, the
strip was inspired by and created to compete with the already established Buck
Rogers adventure strip. Alex Raymond, known as "the artist's artist"

In Australia, the character and strip were retitled Speed Gordon
to avoid a negative connotation of the word "Flash". At the time, the
predominant meaning of "flash" was "showy", connoting dishonesty.

X-Men 2099 was a comic book series published by Marvel Comics
from 1993 to 1996 that chronicled the adventures of an X-Men team in the year
2099. It extends the Marvel 2099 imprint, which features other future versions
of popular Marvel characters, such as Spider-Man 2099 and Hulk 2099. The series
was written by John Francis Moore and largely pencilled by Ron Lim, whose
signatures are on this cover and it too is the First of this run of editions,
October 1993.

As with all vintage items the condition of the comic itself
dictates the price it may realise if surrendered to a comic auction or to
another collector. The flash Gordon is currently worth only $24.00, the XMEN for
a mere $6.80, perhaps a little more due to the creators signatures on the cover.
They have not been collected for any value they may bring in at some future
decade, their owner is an avid X-Men fan and he thinks Flash Gordon is ok too.
He wonders why Hugh is taking so long to come out with a new movie…

The vintage You Tube Flash Gordon video we've placed here is one
of numerous available on the Internet and was produced by Columbia in 1936 as
its first successful Movie Serial. Movie serials, or Chapter plays, were short
serialised fiction made to run in conjunction with a feature film. The Flash
Gordon serials were some of the most expensive made. They ran at the theatres
they were shown in for a week with their cliff-hanger endings designed to induce
patrons to return the following week simply to find out what happens
next.